What Marble is all about

MARBLE - MANIFESTO

Principles and intentions of the Marble Project

v.0.3.2, April 12th, 2007

Virtual Globes have existed since decades already and have been
subject of numerous papers in scientific research. Although many of
them had been available for personal computers they only recently
gained the awareness of public interest: Google Earth suddenly allowed
people to spot their houses' roofs free of charge from high above and
enabled them in combination with Google Maps to show their Google
Search Queries referenced on a geographical map. Almost instantly
Google Earth had become the "industry leader" among virtual globes
that others had to measure up to [1].

Why Marble?

Today there exist numerous virtual globes and the market has embraced
strong contenders such as Google Earth/Maps, MS Virtual Earth 3D and
NASA WorldWind [2]. A new virtual globe project must be able to offer
strong selling points and has got to focus on those without
compromises. Otherwise it simply won't gain public relevance.

"Where?" is a pretty basic question that computer users have got to
ask and answer quite often - no matter what they are working on. The
free desktop has been advancing since years already. And while
there's a pretty large amount of free software GIS ("Geographical
Information System") applications available [3] they are mostly
targeted at advanced users who deal with geo data during their daytime
jobs or as a matter of enthusiasm. However, most people out there
aren't cartographers and don't want to be. These people expect a
simple and clean task-oriented interface that adheres to the map
layout standards that decades of cartography have developed to improve
ease of use of maps.

So for casual users there is still missing a fast, flexible, visually
pleasing and easy to use map component. For developers, Marble offers
a light-weight, fast, cross platform map component that can be used
online as well as offline with meaningful results and that don't
require proprietary webservices.

Marble is meant to become for "geo browsers" what KHTML/WebKit is for
web browsers already.

From an average user's point of view a map component such as "Marble"
should meet the following requirements:

1. FAST

To allow instant access and usage as a widget the Marble Widget
should start up instantly and be ready for use within 2-3
seconds. So "application" startup time should always be kept as
low as possible.

Technically this means that the Marble Widget needs to be heavily
optimized for start up times and should have a minimal number of
dependencies (as an increasing amount of libraries will slow down
the application's launch).

Most other virtual globes have startup times of 15-30 secs.
That's just an eternity to wait for if you just want to look up
something.

2. VISUALLY APPEALING

The maps drawn by Marble Widget should adhere to visual
cartographic standards and should look appealing. Usually people
prefer the 3D globe view as it looks more natural, mostly because
of minimal distortion and because it looks more "advanced". It
should be possible to easily print the maps and to embed them into
documents without getting a pixel mess that is hard to decipher.

Most other virtual globes don't offer good printing support and
the graphical representation most of the time is just limited to
satellite views that are often labeled pretty badly. Web based
solutions (such as Google Maps) are quite static in their
appearance and are limited in terms of possible modification.

3. EASE OF USE

Another very important aspect is usability: The feature set should
cover the use cases of the primary target user only. 3D flights
are pretty exciting for users that want to be entertained.
However most users don't need them, don't have the time to
experiment with them or don't even discover that feature. So
focusing on the top-bottom view exclusively ("2.5D") makes sense
for Marble.

Maps should be easy to read. In a lot of cases this will mean
that the flat projection ("equirectangular projection" / "plate
carrée") is more convenient (e.g. in a timezone chooser dialog).

I personally consider Google Earth's interface too complex for
most users we are aiming for. Google Maps on the other hand seems
too simple to me and also has a slight annoyance factor due to its
web based nature.

4. MINIMAL HARDWARE/SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS

The Marble Widget should work at usable speed out of the box on
all possible hardware the desktop environment is running on. It
should always show exactly the same output independent of the
hardware. During installation modifications to the system should
stay as low as possible.

This is an important point as people will simply neglect a
solution if it's too painful to install or results in other
unnecessary challenges during configuration. Unfortunately many,
if not most, computer systems out there don't offer decent 3D
hardware acceleration for graphics. So the solution we are aiming
for should not depend on 3D hardware acceleration, although we
certainly might want to offer solutions such as an OpenGL backend
as an option. Also the amount of software needed to install the
map component should stay as low as possible (see 1.) ).

5. OFFLINE USAGE

The Marble Widget should offer a minimal data set that is
specifically edited and compiled for offline usage. This is
especially useful in countries where internet access is restricted
or expensive. Online usage should cover incremental downloading
of texture tiles, vector data (e.g. OpenStreetMap) and wikipedia
articles.
Concerning offline geographical data Marble intends to deliver the
"biggest bang for the byte" and provide as much high quality
information per byte as possible.

For all information that goes beyond map labels ("Marble Almanac")
we have started cooperation with the Wikipedia Offline Reader
Project.

6. FREE SOFTWARE & OPEN STANDARDS

The Marble Widget is free software and should use a small set of
open standards for communication with other applications at
runtime and to save data to the storage medium. The open KML file
format[4] used by Google Earth is probably the most popular file
format these days to geo reference data. Through "feeding" KML
streams to the map component, applications are offered a simple
"programming" interface to control the map's appearance and
behaviour. All Information displayed on the map widget should be
covered by free licenses using sources such as NASA or
OpenStreetMap.

Many other virtual globes are proprietary and are using commercial
geo data that is considered "non-free" (as it isn't freely
redistributable).

The Marble Universe

Apart from the Marble Widget (which is implemented using the Qt4.2
library only) there are other planned member components of the Marble
universe:

1. Marble Desktop Globe

KDE 4 application for KDE-EDU: This "reference" application is
meant to show off much of Marble's full potential. At the current
point of time it's the next logical step as educational
applications don't need to cover the data in full detail to be
useful. Once it reaches maturity the Marble backend could be
moved into a more central place, e.g. kdelibs/base.

2. Marble Widget

Can be used in different applications like KStars, KControl,
DigiKam, KGeography, Kopete, Addressbook, Risk-Game, KWorldClock,
Traceroute, Plasma Weather Applet, and so on. Depending on the use case
it can have different appearances:

"normal" widget

selection dialog

developer mode

3. Marble Framework

A framework of geo services for the desktop. This should cover a
"position provider" backend like GPS, hostip.info, track turtle,
and information services ( "Marble Almanac" ).